Australia news live: South African whose visa cancelled after attending Sydney neo-Nazi rally taken into custody ‘between 4 and 5am’, Burke says | Australia news


South African man in Villawood detention centre after neo-Nazi rally

Josh Butler

Josh Butler

A South African man whose visa was cancelled after attending a neo-Nazi rally in Sydney was taken into immigration detention in the early hours of this morning, the home affairs minister, Tony Burke, said.

Burke said South African national Matthew Gruter had his visa cancelled on Monday, and was taken into detention early Tuesday morning “between 4 and 5am”. It’s understood he was taken to Villawood detention centre, where he will stay until he is deported.

The white supremacist group of which Gruter is a member has launched an online fundraiser for him, which has garnered nearly $20,000 in donations since being set up today. The fundraiser page claims Gruter would “fight to remain in Australia via every possible avenue”.

Burke says the man has “very limited” options to appeal, because the visa was cancelled by a ministerial decision, adding that he expects Gruter “will be gone very soon” even with the right to appeal to courts.

The minister defended his decision to cancel the visa, saying today:

What could be a clearer example of someone showing they don’t care about cohesion in Australia, than turning up to a Nazi rally?

Multicultural Australia and modern Australia are the same thing. Someone who gets involved in neo-Nazism in Australia shouldn’t pretend they’re somehow patriotic. They hate modern Australia.

My priority is that Australians feel at home, feel safe, that they are safe in Australia. Anyone who wants to stand in the way of that can find the full force of the law coming down on them.

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Penry Buckley

Penry Buckley

More on the proposal to reintroduce two-way tolling on the Sydney Harbour Bridge

The New South Wales government plans to make permanent a $60 weekly cap for tolls on Sydney’s roads, with the premier saying it could be funded by reintroducing two-way tolling on the Harbour Bridge.

The cap – under which drivers can claim up to $340 a week back from the government after spending $60 per vehicle – started in early 2024 and was due to expire at the end of this year.

A 2024 independent report found Sydney drivers were spending $2.5bn annually on tolls in Sydney, with the greatest impact on residents of the western suburbs.

Premier Chris Minns said the government was considering two-way tolling on state-owned assets, including the Sydney Harbour Bridge and tunnel, and the yet-to-be completed Western Harbour Tunnel and M6 motorway, to pay for making the cap permanent.

“It’s not everybody’s cup of tea, but we think it’s the fairest thing to do when you consider that a lot of the communities that will use the Harbour Bridge have access to public transport,” the premier said.

Many communities in western Sydney and the Central Coast just don’t have anything like that.

Minns said two-way tolling on state-owned toll roads was likely to align with the completion of the Western Harbour Tunnel, which is scheduled for 2028.

Read more here:

Photograph: Manfred Gottschalk/Getty Images
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